The Shore Shirt is Taylor Stitch doing what Taylor Stitch does best: a casual button-down cut for someone who wants something that looks less precious over time, not more.
The Verdict
At $148, this is a solid shirt for the man who wants washed indigo without the stiffness of raw denim shirting. It's not a revelation, but it does most things right and nothing badly.
The Make
The fabric is a 60/40 cotton-lyocell twill, washed before it reaches you. The lyocell content is doing meaningful work here: it softens the hand considerably compared to a straight cotton twill, and it gives the shirt a slight drape that pure cotton at this weight rarely achieves. Taylor Stitch doesn't publish the GSM, which is frustrating. Based on the drape and the way it photographs, this reads like a mid-weight, somewhere in the 130-160 GSM range, suitable for three seasons with the right layering underneath.
The washed indigo finish means the color variation is baked in before you buy it. You're not going to get the fade arc you'd chase in raw denim shirting; what you get instead is a consistent, already-lived-in tone that looks the same on day one as it does after thirty washes. Construction is made in Vietnam, which is increasingly standard for brands at this price point. The care instruction is cold wash, tumble dry low, which the lyocell blend essentially demands.
The brand's broader commitments are real. The cotton is GOTS-certified organic, and Taylor Stitch runs a repair program that's not just marketing copy. Worth noting, even if it doesn't change how the collar rolls.
The Fit
Regular cut, true to size across a 36-48 inch chest range. This is not a slim shirt. The chest and shoulders are cut with room, the hem is long enough to tuck if you want to, and the sleeves land correctly at a standard length. Men with athletic builds will find it proportionate; men on the slimmer side may find extra fabric through the torso. There's no darting in the back.
The Context
The Shore Shirt sits alongside Taylor Stitch's broader woven shirting lineup, which includes heavier flannels and their Yosemite collar shirts. This one is positioned as the warmer-weather casual option. If you're cross-shopping, Corridor makes a washed twill shirt in a similar register at a slightly higher price and with a slightly more considered construction. Orslow makes Japanese equivalents that fade more interestingly but require more care. At $148, the Shore Shirt is the lower-friction option.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. The data suggests a shirt that performs reliably without particularly surprising you, which is sometimes exactly what you need. The lyocell blend is the most interesting thing about it, and it's genuinely useful. If you want a washed indigo shirt you don't have to think about, this is a reasonable answer to that question.



